My Mission For You:

Friday, July 13, 2012

Creating Mood

Beneath
a sky bruised with black and purple clouds, a woman limped down an alley. The
pavement was slick with slime. Broken bottles and crushed beer cans littered
the ground. Every now and then, she stepped over a used syringe.

The
air in the alley carried the stench of stale alcohol with a pleasant splash of
raw vomit and human piss. Graffiti marked the walls; there were gang signs
spray-painted in blood red, vulgar words scribbled in anger, and pornographic
drawings.

A Child Called "It" by Dave PelzerI've read this book many times!Photo by Chrys Fey

Mood is the atmosphere created by the setting of a story and actions of the characters in it. The teaser in the beginning is an excerpt from the first book in my series and an excellent example of mood created by setting. In the excerpt, I depicted a dangerous alley where low lives go to drink and do drugs. The mood is dark and mysterious because I do not introduce or reveal the woman’s identity, it is also pitiful in regards to the state of the inhabitants of the alley.

Mood also relates to how the reader emotionally responds to the setting and the action of characters. One example for how a reader can emotionally respond to mood would be while reading the passage in Dave Pelzer’s book, “A Child Called It” when he is cleaning the infected, puss-filled stab wound on his side. Reading that would make any reader grimace in pain, feel disgust at the ordeal this child had to go through, and even nausea.

To create mood depict vivid settings, give detail to the actions of your characters, and use emotion. You can do this with force like in Dave Pelzer’s book or subtly by describing a summer afternoon that makes your readers recall the dry, sweltering days from their youth when they would float in a lukewarm pool to stay cool. The mood for such a writing could be happy, leisurely, and nostalgic.

QUESTION: Has a book ever made you respond emotionally?

When I was reading “Devine Secrets of the Ya-ya Sisterhood” by Rebecca Wells I did everything from laugh until I couldn’t breathe to crying with my face buried in a pillow.Show your support by becoming a follower! Thank you!